Category: Recreational
Size: cramped
Condition: hobbled together, but clean
Inhabitants:
Description
The Seventh Daughter is a tattoo shop that sits in a seedy alley of the _ floor of Jisang Tower. Because of the talent of the artists and their connections to some skilled scavengers and modders, the shop has access to some pretty good quality tools, modded out with other tech to make them more comfortable to hold for long design sessions and receptive to homegrown ink synthetics. Their unique ink recipes create shades of blue and red that stand out from other shops, and their inky black is some of the darkest and longest-lasting. Their artists specialize in swirling patterns, sigils, delicate prayers written in a range of Asian languages (Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, etc.), and banded blackwork.
Its name comes from a Korean shamanist myth of the Abandoned Princess, who after traveling to the underworld to find an elixir of life for her dying parents, becomes a goddess who guides the souls of the dead from earth to heaven. The resident artists named the shop after this myth as subtle commentary against the commercialization of Eomoni, the Mother, by Mantra Corporation.
Category: Recreational
Size: cramped
Condition: hobbled together, but clean
Inhabitants:
Description
The Seventh Daughter is a tattoo shop that sits in a seedy alley of the _ floor of Jisang Tower. Because of the talent of the artists and their connections to some skilled scavengers and modders, the shop has access to some pretty good quality tools, modded out with other tech to make them more comfortable to hold for long design sessions and receptive to homegrown ink synthetics. Their unique ink recipes create shades of blue and red that stand out from other shops, and their inky black is some of the darkest and longest-lasting. Their artists specialize in swirling patterns, sigils, delicate prayers written in a range of Asian languages (Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, etc.), and banded blackwork.
Its name comes from a Korean shamanist myth of the Abandoned Princess, who after traveling to the underworld to find an elixir of life for her dying parents, becomes a goddess who guides the souls of the dead from earth to heaven. The resident artists named the shop after this myth as subtle commentary against the commercialization of Eomoni, the Mother, by Mantra Corporation.